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Orthodox Church of the Czech Lands and Slovakia

The Orthodox Church of the Czech Lands and Slovakia (Czech: Pravoslavná církev v Českých zemích a na Slovensku; Slovak: Pravoslávna cirkev v českých krajinách a na Slovensku) is a self-governing body of the Eastern Orthodox Church that territorially covers the countries of the Czech Republic and Slovakia. The current primate of the Czech and Slovak Orthodox Church is Rastislav of Prešov (born Ondrej Gont), Metropolitan of the Czech Lands and Slovakia since 2014.

Orthodox Church of the Czech Lands and Slovakia
Pravoslavná církev v Českých zemích a na Slovensku (Czech)
Pravoslávna cirkev v českých krajinách a na Slovensku (Slovak)
ClassificationEastern Orthodox
PrimateRastislav (Gont)
Bishops6
Parishes172
LanguageChurch Slavonic,
Czech and Slovak
HeadquartersPrague, Czech Republic
Prešov, Slovakia
Territory Czech Republic
 Slovakia
Possessions
FounderSs. Cyril and Methodius
Independence1951, 1998
RecognitionAutocephaly recognised in 1951 by the Russian Orthodox Church and in 1998 by the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople.
Members75,000 (2021)[1]
Official websiteCzech official website
Slovak official website

History edit

 
Saints Cyril and Methodius Cathedral in Prague
 
Interior
 
Church of St Gorazd in Olomouc

Foundation edit

The Church of the Czech Lands and Slovakia presents both an ancient history as well as a very modern history. The present-day church occupies the land of Great Moravia, where the brothers Ss. Cyril and Methodius began their mission to the Slavs, introducing the liturgical and canonical order of the Eastern Orthodox Church, translated into Church Slavonic, using mostly Greek calques to explain concepts for which no Slavic term existed.[2]: 192  In doing this they developed the first Slavic alphabet, a mixture of Greek and Hebrew-based characters with a few invented characters of their own to represent unique Slavic sounds.[2]: 190 : 191 

This was done at the express invitation of the powerful ruler Rastislav of Moravia. Yet within the Moravian state there was a Frankish party among the nobility who desired closer ties with the Kingdom of Francia, whose ruler, Louis the German, was Ratislav's nominal suzerain, and a Frankish bishop had ecclesiastical jurisdiction over a small part of Ratislav's domain that had earlier converted to Christianity. Despite the Photian Schism, the churches of Rome and Constantinople still preserved some semblance of unity, and Pope Nicholas I did not want to see the formation of a large independent Frankish church in Central Europe. When an appeal of the ecclesiastical issue was made to Rome, Nicholas summoned both Cyril and Methodius and the complaining Frankish parties to his court to hear them out. Nicholas died before their arrival, but the new Pope Adrian II reached a compromise after hearing both sides: Old Church Slavonic was confirmed as a liturgical language alongside Greek, Hebrew and Latin, and Methodius was confirmed as bishop with a Frankish co-adjutor, Wiching. Adrian was convinced by Cyril's impassioned defence of the Slavic liturgy in which he cited 1 Corinthians 14:19 "Yet in the church I had rather speak five words with my understanding, that by my voice I might teach others also, than ten thousand words in an unknown tongue." Cyril fell ill while the brothers were still at Rome, and on his deathbed he asked Methodius to swear to return to Moravia and complete the mission to the Slavs instead of returning to the monastic life on Mount Olympus as he had intended to do.[2]: 192–4 

Methodius kept his word and returned, but his mission was interrupted by the death of Ratislav, as the new ruler, Svatopluk I of Moravia sided with the pro-Frankish party and had Methodius imprisoned for almost three years, until he was freed through the intercession of Pope John VIII. For the next ten years, Methodius continued his work, but the death of John VIII in 882 removed his papal protection, and Methodius died in 885. After this, Pope Stephen V of Rome confirmed his Swabian co-adjutor Wiching as bishop.[3] Methodius's disciples were imprisoned, expelled to Bulgaria, like Gorazd and many others, or enslaved. The expelled, led by Clement of Ohrid and Naum of Preslav, were of great importance to the Eastern Orthodox faith in the already Christian from year 864 Bulgaria, after they were released from prison and escorted to the Danube.[2]: 197  In AD 870 the Fourth Council of Constantinople granted the Bulgarians the right to have the oldest organized autocephalous Slavic Orthodox Church that little later, from autonomous Bulgarian archbishopric, became patriarchate. Major event that strengthens the process of Christianization was the development of the Cyrillic script in Bulgaria at the founded by Naum and Clement Preslav Literary School in the 9th century. The Cyrillic script and the liturgy in Old Church Slavonic, were declared official in Bulgaria in 893.[4][5][6]

Survival and revival edit

 
Eastern Orthodox Church in Komárno (Slovakia), built in the middle of the 18th century under jurisdiction of the Serbian Orthodox Eparchy of Buda
 
Eastern Orthodox Bishop Gorazd of Prague (1921–1942)
 
Czechoslovakia, from 1920 to 1938

The Eastern Orthodox ecclesiastical order survived in present-day eastern Slovakia and neighboring regions due to its nearness and influence to Kievan Rus', especially among the population of the Rusins, until the middle of the 17th century when the Union of Uzhhorod was brought about in the Kingdom of Hungary. During the times of suppression, remaining Eastern Orthodox Christians from the region kept their ties with neighboring Eastern Orthodox Eparchy of Buda of the Serbian Patriarchate of Peć and later with the Metropolitanate of Karlovci. One of the most northern parishes of the Serbian Orthodox Church existed in the Slovak city of Komárno with local church built in the 18th century still standing today.[7]

After the creation of Czechoslovakia in 1918, legal restraints to Eastern Orthodoxy were removed. In the new state, Eastern Orthodox communities were mainly located in the eastern parts of the country, including Carpatho-Rus' that was incorporated into Czechoslovakia in 1919. In that region, the city of Mukachevo was located with its traditions going back to the old Eastern Orthodox Eparchy of Mukachevo, that existed before the Union of Uzhhorod. In the spirit of Eastern Orthodox revival, many people in the region left the Uniate (Greek Catholic) Church. Since there were no Eastern Orthodox bishops in Czechoslovakia, local leaders looked to the Serbian Orthodox Church because Serbs were historically and ethnically close to the Czechs, Slovaks and Rusins. That view was also supported by state authorities of Czechoslovakia (1920). In order to regulate the ecclesiastical order, Bishop Dositej Vasić of Niš (Serbia) arrived in Prague and met with leaders of Eastern Orthodox community, receiving them into full communion (1921).[8]

Among those seeking to restore ties with Eastern Orthodox Church was a Catholic priest Matěj Pavlík, who had been interested in Eastern Orthodoxy for years. The Serbian Orthodox Church thus consented to receive him in full communion and he became Archimandrite with the name Gorazd, in honor of Saint Gorazd of Moravia, disciple and successor of Saint Methodius, Archbishop of Moravia. On September 25, 1921, Archimandrite Gorazd was consecrated Bishop of Moravia and Silesia at the Cathedral of the Holy Archangel Michael in Belgrade, Yugoslavia, by Serbian Patriarch Dimitrije. Bishop Gorazd received jurisdiction over Czech Lands.[9]

As the Orthodox leader in the new nation of Czechoslovakia, Bishop Gorazd laid the foundations of the Orthodox Church throughout Bohemia, Moravia, and also into Slovakia. In Bohemia, he oversaw the building of eleven churches and two chapels. He also published the essential books for the conduct of church services that were translated into Czech. He provided aid to those in Slovakia and Carpatho-Rus', which then was part of Czechoslovakia, and who wanted to return to Eastern Orthodox Faith from the Unia, Union with Rome. Thus, in the inter-war period, Bishop Gorazd built the small Czech church that during World War II would show how firmly it was connected to the Czech nation.[10]

By 1931, Eastern Orthodox renewal in eastern Slovakia and Carpatho-Rus' was progressing very well, allowing the creation of the second Diocese that was named: Eparchy of Mukačevo and Prešov.[11] That diocese was also created under the auspices of the Serbian Orthodox Church. First bishop of Mukachevo and Prešov was Damaskin Grdanički.[12] In 1938, he was succeeded by Bishop Vladimir Rajić.

In 1938, Nazi Germany succeeded in annexing the Sudetenland from Czechoslovakia during the Munich Conference. In the same year, after the First Vienna Award, southern parts of Slovakia and Carpathian Ruthenia were annexed by Fascist Hungary. Since the city of Mukačevo was taken by Fascist Hungary, bishop Vladimir had to move to the city of Khust. In 1939, Nazi Germany annexed the remainder of the Czech lands into the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia and installed a pro-Nazi regime in Slovakia. In the same time, Fascist Hungary occupied the rest of Carpathian Ruthenia and in 1941 Hungarian authorities arrested bishop Vladimir Rajić and deported him back to Serbia.

Years of Nazi occupation (1938/9-1944/5) were marked by renewed restrictions and persecutions.[13] By 1942, Reinhard Heydrich, architect of the Final Solution, had become governor of the Czech Protectorate. After the May 27, 1942 assassination attack on Heydrich's car in Prague, Czech and Slovak partisans took refuge in the crypt of the Ss. Cyril and Methodius Cathedral before continuing their escape. They were aided by senior church laymen, who kept Bishop Gorazd informed. However, their presence was discovered by the Nazis, and on June 18 the Nazis attacked their hiding place in the cathedral, forcing them to commit suicide. The Orthodox priests, laymen, and Bishop Gorazd were arrested and killed by firing squads on September 4, 1942.[14]

In reprisal the Nazis forbade the church to operate in Bohemia and Moravia.[15] Churches and chapels were closed, and a rounding up of Czechs was conducted, including the whole village of Lidice, whose inhabitants were either killed or sent to forced labor camps.[16] For the Orthodox the whole church fell under the Nazi persecution and was decimated. A total of 256 Orthodox priests and laymen were executed, and church life came to a stop.[17]

Post-War developments edit

In 1945, after the incorporation of Carpatho-Rus' by the USSR as Zakarpattia Oblast of the Ukrainian SSR, eastern parts of the Eparchy of Mukačevo and Prešov were transferred from the jurisdiction of Serbian Orthodox Church to the jurisdiction of the Russian Orthodox Church, and on that territory a new Eparchy of Mukačevo and Užgorod was formed, while the western part of the diocese remained in Czechoslovakia and was reorganized as the Eparchy of Prešov.

After World War II, the Orthodox Church in Czechoslovakia began its recovery without its bishop. On December 9, 1951, the Patriarch of Moscow granted autocephaly to the Orthodox Church of Czechoslovakia, recognized by nearly all Orthodox local churches, though this action was not recognized by Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople, who made claims to jurisdiction, regarding the Czechoslovak church as being autonomous under its authority. The Patriarch of Constantinople later issued a tomos, or official proclamation, of autocephaly in 1998.[18]

When the Communists came to power in April 1950, the government convoked a synod of the Slovak Greek Catholic Church in Prešov, where five priests and a large number of laymen signed a document declaring that the union with Rome was disbanded and asking to be received into the jurisdiction of the Moscow Patriarchate, later the Orthodox Church of Czechoslovakia. Greek Catholic faithfuls and clergy were presented with the choice of remaining in union with Rome and becoming Latin-rite Catholics or keeping their Byzantine rite and become Orthodox. The government transferred control of the Greek Catholic churches and other property to the Orthodox Church.

During the Prague Spring in 1968, the former Greek Catholic parishes were allowed to restore communion with Rome.[19] As a result of anti-Russian sentiment, of the 292 parishes involved, 205 voted in favor. This was one of the few reforms by Dubček that survived the Soviet invasion the same year. However, most of church buildings remained in the hands of Orthodox Church as they had originally been built as Orthodox churches and/or the congregations of these churches had in large measure voted to have their parishes placed under the omophorion of the Orthodox Church in 1950. After communism was overthrown in the 1989 Velvet Revolution, most of the Church property was returned to the Slovak Greek Catholic Church by 1993.

The martyrdom of Bishop Gorazd was recognized by the Serbian Orthodox Church on May 4, 1961, which canonized Gorazd as a New Martyr. Subsequently, on August 24, 1987, he was canonized at the Cathedral of St. Gorazd in Olomouc, Moravia.[20]

Archbishop Rastislav of Prešov was elected by the Extraordinary Synod held on January 11, 2014, as the new primate.[21] On December 9, 2013, the Synod removed Archbishop Simeon (Jakovlevic) of Brno and Olomouc from his position as Locum Tenens (ad interim administrator following the resignation of the previous primate, Archbishop Krystof, over allegations of sexual relations with women),[22] and appointed Archbishop Rastislav in his place,[23] an action against which Archbishop Simeon protested[24] and which was deplored by Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I of Constantinople, who had supported Krystof.[25]

Administration edit

After Czechoslovakia separated into independent countries of the Czech Republic and Slovakia in 1993, church activity continued in each country as separate legal entities: in the Czech Republic as the Orthodox Church in the Czech Lands and in the Slovak Republic as the Orthodox Church in Slovakia, but canonical unity was maintained as the Orthodox Church of the Czech Lands and Slovakia. The church is now organized into four eparchies divided into two administrative centers: the Metropolitan Council for the Czech Republic resident in Prague and the Metropolitan Council for the Slovak Republic in Prešov. Under the Council of the Czech Lands (Prague) are the eparchies of Prague and Olomouc-Brno, while the eparchies of Prešov and Michalovce are under the Council of Slovakia (Prešov).

After the death of Metropolitan Dorotheus of Prague and All Czechoslovakia, Archbishop Nicholas of Prešov was elected the new metropolitan, and the church's primatial see was moved from Prague to Prešov. Metr. Nicholas reposed[clarification needed] on January 30, 2006, and was replaced by Archbishop Christopher of Prague and the Czech Lands (elected May 2, 2006).

In the Czech Republic there are 82 parishes, with 51 in Bohemia and 31 in Moravia and Silesia. In Slovakia there are 90 parishes, with 69 in the eparchy of Prešov and 21 in the eparchy of Michalovce. The Orthodox Theological Faculty of the University of Prešov provides an education for future priests of combined Church. The faculty maintains a branch in Olomouc.[26]

The Monastery of St. Procopius of Sazava is located in Most, and that of the Dormition in Vilemov.

The current primate of the Czechoslovak Orthodox Church is Rastislav of Prešov [cs] (born Ondrej Gont), Metropolitan of the Czech Lands and Slovakia since 2014.

Archdioceses and archbishops edit

Vicar dioceses and bishops edit

  • Diocese of Beroun : Jachým (Hrdý) (since 2015), vicar bishop of Prague
  • Diocese of Šumperk : Izaiáš (Slaninka) (since 2015), vicar bishop of Brno and Olomouc

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ CNEWA - Orthodox Church of the Czech Lands and Slovakia, retrieved 2023-08-28
  2. ^ a b c d Wells, Colin (2006). Sailing from Byzantium: How a Lost Empire Shaped the World. New York: Bantam Dell. ISBN 9780553382730.
  3. ^ Richard P. McBrien, Lives of the Popes, (HarperCollins, 2000), 144
  4. ^ Dvornik, Francis (1956). The Slavs: Their Early History and Civilization. Boston: American Academy of Arts and Sciences. p. 179. The Psalter and the Book of Prophets were adapted or "modernized" with special regard to their use in Bulgarian churches, and it was in this school that glagolitic writing was replaced by the so-called Cyrillic writing, which was more akin to the Greek uncial, simplified matters considerably and is still used by the Orthodox Slavs.
  5. ^ Florin Curta (2006). Southeastern Europe in the Middle Ages, 500–1250. Cambridge Medieval Textbooks. Cambridge University Press. pp. 221–222. ISBN 978-0-521-81539-0. Cyrillic preslav.
  6. ^ J. M. Hussey, Andrew Louth (2010). "The Orthodox Church in the Byzantine Empire". Oxford History of the Christian Church. Oxford University Press. p. 100. ISBN 978-0-19-161488-0.
  7. ^ The Changing World Religion Map: Sacred Places, Identities, Practices and Politics (2015), p. 430.
  8. ^ The Czechoslovak Heresy and Schism: The Emergence of a National Czechoslovak Church (1975), p. 43.
  9. ^ Martyr Gorazd of Prague
  10. ^ Historie naší pravoslavné církve
  11. ^ Eastern Churches Journal: A Journal of Eastern Christendom, vol. 4 (1997), p. 61
  12. ^ Bishop Damaskin (Grdanički)
  13. ^ Four fighting years (1943), p. 69.
  14. ^ News Flashes from Czechoslovakia Under Nazi Domination (1942), p. 151, 155.
  15. ^ Christian Churches in Czechoslovakia: History, Mission, Organization, Statistics, Addresses (1992), p. 19-20.
  16. ^ Memories of Lidice (2007), p. 71.
  17. ^ Eastern Christianity and politics in the twentieth century, p. 255-256.
  18. ^ "Metropolitan Herman concludes Official Visit to the Orthodox Church of the Czech Lands and Slovakia". Orthodox Church in America. October 11, 2004. Retrieved August 25, 2014.
  19. ^ "Orthodox Church of Czechoslovakia". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 25 September 2022.
  20. ^ Eastern Christianity and the Cold War, 1945–91 (2010), p. 137-138, 143.
  21. ^ "New head of Orthodox Church of Czech Lands and Slovakia elected". OrthoChristian.Com. Retrieved 2019-12-31.
  22. ^ Prague Daily Monitor, "Czech Orthodox Church split over money, archbishop" February 1, 2014, at the Wayback Machine
  23. ^ Communiqué of the Holy Synod of the Orthodox Church in the Czech Land and in Slovakia February 2, 2014, at the Wayback Machine
  24. ^ Statement of Archbishop Simeon January 3, 2014, at the Wayback Machine
  25. ^ . www.pravoslavnacirkev.info. Archived from the original on February 11, 2015. Retrieved 2019-12-31.
  26. ^ Orthodox World website, Orthodox Theological Faculty Of Prešov, Olomouc, Czech Republic

External links edit

  • Official website in the Czech Republic
  • Official website in Slovakia (in Slovak)
  • (in Czech)
  • Electronic edition of the magazine "Icon"
  • Pages about the orthodox Church in the Czech Republic (in Czech)
  • (scroll down)
  • Article on the Orthodox Church in the Czech and Slovak Republics by Ronald Roberson on the CNEWA web site

orthodox, church, czech, lands, slovakia, czech, pravoslavná, církev, Českých, zemích, slovensku, slovak, pravoslávna, cirkev, českých, krajinách, slovensku, self, governing, body, eastern, orthodox, church, that, territorially, covers, countries, czech, repub. The Orthodox Church of the Czech Lands and Slovakia Czech Pravoslavna cirkev v Ceskych zemich a na Slovensku Slovak Pravoslavna cirkev v ceskych krajinach a na Slovensku is a self governing body of the Eastern Orthodox Church that territorially covers the countries of the Czech Republic and Slovakia The current primate of the Czech and Slovak Orthodox Church is Rastislav of Presov born Ondrej Gont Metropolitan of the Czech Lands and Slovakia since 2014 Orthodox Church of the Czech Lands and SlovakiaPravoslavna cirkev v Ceskych zemich a na Slovensku Czech Pravoslavna cirkev v ceskych krajinach a na Slovensku Slovak ClassificationEastern OrthodoxPrimateRastislav Gont Bishops6Parishes172LanguageChurch Slavonic Czech and SlovakHeadquartersPrague Czech RepublicPresov SlovakiaTerritory Czech Republic SlovakiaPossessions FounderSs Cyril and MethodiusIndependence1951 1998RecognitionAutocephaly recognised in 1951 by the Russian Orthodox Church and in 1998 by the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople Members75 000 2021 1 Official websiteCzech official websiteSlovak official website Contents 1 History 1 1 Foundation 1 2 Survival and revival 1 3 Post War developments 2 Administration 2 1 Archdioceses and archbishops 2 2 Vicar dioceses and bishops 3 See also 4 References 5 External linksHistory editThe neutrality of this section is disputed Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please do not remove this message until conditions to do so are met September 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Saints Cyril and Methodius Cathedral in Prague nbsp Interior nbsp Church of St Gorazd in OlomoucFoundation edit The Church of the Czech Lands and Slovakia presents both an ancient history as well as a very modern history The present day church occupies the land of Great Moravia where the brothers Ss Cyril and Methodius began their mission to the Slavs introducing the liturgical and canonical order of the Eastern Orthodox Church translated into Church Slavonic using mostly Greek calques to explain concepts for which no Slavic term existed 2 192 In doing this they developed the first Slavic alphabet a mixture of Greek and Hebrew based characters with a few invented characters of their own to represent unique Slavic sounds 2 190 191 This was done at the express invitation of the powerful ruler Rastislav of Moravia Yet within the Moravian state there was a Frankish party among the nobility who desired closer ties with the Kingdom of Francia whose ruler Louis the German was Ratislav s nominal suzerain and a Frankish bishop had ecclesiastical jurisdiction over a small part of Ratislav s domain that had earlier converted to Christianity Despite the Photian Schism the churches of Rome and Constantinople still preserved some semblance of unity and Pope Nicholas I did not want to see the formation of a large independent Frankish church in Central Europe When an appeal of the ecclesiastical issue was made to Rome Nicholas summoned both Cyril and Methodius and the complaining Frankish parties to his court to hear them out Nicholas died before their arrival but the new Pope Adrian II reached a compromise after hearing both sides Old Church Slavonic was confirmed as a liturgical language alongside Greek Hebrew and Latin and Methodius was confirmed as bishop with a Frankish co adjutor Wiching Adrian was convinced by Cyril s impassioned defence of the Slavic liturgy in which he cited 1 Corinthians 14 19 Yet in the church I had rather speak five words with my understanding that by my voice I might teach others also than ten thousand words in an unknown tongue Cyril fell ill while the brothers were still at Rome and on his deathbed he asked Methodius to swear to return to Moravia and complete the mission to the Slavs instead of returning to the monastic life on Mount Olympus as he had intended to do 2 192 4 Methodius kept his word and returned but his mission was interrupted by the death of Ratislav as the new ruler Svatopluk I of Moravia sided with the pro Frankish party and had Methodius imprisoned for almost three years until he was freed through the intercession of Pope John VIII For the next ten years Methodius continued his work but the death of John VIII in 882 removed his papal protection and Methodius died in 885 After this Pope Stephen V of Rome confirmed his Swabian co adjutor Wiching as bishop 3 Methodius s disciples were imprisoned expelled to Bulgaria like Gorazd and many others or enslaved The expelled led by Clement of Ohrid and Naum of Preslav were of great importance to the Eastern Orthodox faith in the already Christian from year 864 Bulgaria after they were released from prison and escorted to the Danube 2 197 In AD 870 the Fourth Council of Constantinople granted the Bulgarians the right to have the oldest organized autocephalous Slavic Orthodox Church that little later from autonomous Bulgarian archbishopric became patriarchate Major event that strengthens the process of Christianization was the development of the Cyrillic script in Bulgaria at the founded by Naum and Clement Preslav Literary School in the 9th century The Cyrillic script and the liturgy in Old Church Slavonic were declared official in Bulgaria in 893 4 5 6 Survival and revival edit nbsp Eastern Orthodox Church in Komarno Slovakia built in the middle of the 18th century under jurisdiction of the Serbian Orthodox Eparchy of Buda nbsp Eastern Orthodox Bishop Gorazd of Prague 1921 1942 nbsp Czechoslovakia from 1920 to 1938The Eastern Orthodox ecclesiastical order survived in present day eastern Slovakia and neighboring regions due to its nearness and influence to Kievan Rus especially among the population of the Rusins until the middle of the 17th century when the Union of Uzhhorod was brought about in the Kingdom of Hungary During the times of suppression remaining Eastern Orthodox Christians from the region kept their ties with neighboring Eastern Orthodox Eparchy of Buda of the Serbian Patriarchate of Pec and later with the Metropolitanate of Karlovci One of the most northern parishes of the Serbian Orthodox Church existed in the Slovak city of Komarno with local church built in the 18th century still standing today 7 After the creation of Czechoslovakia in 1918 legal restraints to Eastern Orthodoxy were removed In the new state Eastern Orthodox communities were mainly located in the eastern parts of the country including Carpatho Rus that was incorporated into Czechoslovakia in 1919 In that region the city of Mukachevo was located with its traditions going back to the old Eastern Orthodox Eparchy of Mukachevo that existed before the Union of Uzhhorod In the spirit of Eastern Orthodox revival many people in the region left the Uniate Greek Catholic Church Since there were no Eastern Orthodox bishops in Czechoslovakia local leaders looked to the Serbian Orthodox Church because Serbs were historically and ethnically close to the Czechs Slovaks and Rusins That view was also supported by state authorities of Czechoslovakia 1920 In order to regulate the ecclesiastical order Bishop Dositej Vasic of Nis Serbia arrived in Prague and met with leaders of Eastern Orthodox community receiving them into full communion 1921 8 Among those seeking to restore ties with Eastern Orthodox Church was a Catholic priest Matej Pavlik who had been interested in Eastern Orthodoxy for years The Serbian Orthodox Church thus consented to receive him in full communion and he became Archimandrite with the name Gorazd in honor of Saint Gorazd of Moravia disciple and successor of Saint Methodius Archbishop of Moravia On September 25 1921 Archimandrite Gorazd was consecrated Bishop of Moravia and Silesia at the Cathedral of the Holy Archangel Michael in Belgrade Yugoslavia by Serbian Patriarch Dimitrije Bishop Gorazd received jurisdiction over Czech Lands 9 As the Orthodox leader in the new nation of Czechoslovakia Bishop Gorazd laid the foundations of the Orthodox Church throughout Bohemia Moravia and also into Slovakia In Bohemia he oversaw the building of eleven churches and two chapels He also published the essential books for the conduct of church services that were translated into Czech He provided aid to those in Slovakia and Carpatho Rus which then was part of Czechoslovakia and who wanted to return to Eastern Orthodox Faith from the Unia Union with Rome Thus in the inter war period Bishop Gorazd built the small Czech church that during World War II would show how firmly it was connected to the Czech nation 10 By 1931 Eastern Orthodox renewal in eastern Slovakia and Carpatho Rus was progressing very well allowing the creation of the second Diocese that was named Eparchy of Mukacevo and Presov 11 That diocese was also created under the auspices of the Serbian Orthodox Church First bishop of Mukachevo and Presov was Damaskin Grdanicki 12 In 1938 he was succeeded by Bishop Vladimir Rajic In 1938 Nazi Germany succeeded in annexing the Sudetenland from Czechoslovakia during the Munich Conference In the same year after the First Vienna Award southern parts of Slovakia and Carpathian Ruthenia were annexed by Fascist Hungary Since the city of Mukacevo was taken by Fascist Hungary bishop Vladimir had to move to the city of Khust In 1939 Nazi Germany annexed the remainder of the Czech lands into the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia and installed a pro Nazi regime in Slovakia In the same time Fascist Hungary occupied the rest of Carpathian Ruthenia and in 1941 Hungarian authorities arrested bishop Vladimir Rajic and deported him back to Serbia Years of Nazi occupation 1938 9 1944 5 were marked by renewed restrictions and persecutions 13 By 1942 Reinhard Heydrich architect of the Final Solution had become governor of the Czech Protectorate After the May 27 1942 assassination attack on Heydrich s car in Prague Czech and Slovak partisans took refuge in the crypt of the Ss Cyril and Methodius Cathedral before continuing their escape They were aided by senior church laymen who kept Bishop Gorazd informed However their presence was discovered by the Nazis and on June 18 the Nazis attacked their hiding place in the cathedral forcing them to commit suicide The Orthodox priests laymen and Bishop Gorazd were arrested and killed by firing squads on September 4 1942 14 In reprisal the Nazis forbade the church to operate in Bohemia and Moravia 15 Churches and chapels were closed and a rounding up of Czechs was conducted including the whole village of Lidice whose inhabitants were either killed or sent to forced labor camps 16 For the Orthodox the whole church fell under the Nazi persecution and was decimated A total of 256 Orthodox priests and laymen were executed and church life came to a stop 17 Post War developments edit In 1945 after the incorporation of Carpatho Rus by the USSR as Zakarpattia Oblast of the Ukrainian SSR eastern parts of the Eparchy of Mukacevo and Presov were transferred from the jurisdiction of Serbian Orthodox Church to the jurisdiction of the Russian Orthodox Church and on that territory a new Eparchy of Mukacevo and Uzgorod was formed while the western part of the diocese remained in Czechoslovakia and was reorganized as the Eparchy of Presov After World War II the Orthodox Church in Czechoslovakia began its recovery without its bishop On December 9 1951 the Patriarch of Moscow granted autocephaly to the Orthodox Church of Czechoslovakia recognized by nearly all Orthodox local churches though this action was not recognized by Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople who made claims to jurisdiction regarding the Czechoslovak church as being autonomous under its authority The Patriarch of Constantinople later issued a tomos or official proclamation of autocephaly in 1998 18 When the Communists came to power in April 1950 the government convoked a synod of the Slovak Greek Catholic Church in Presov where five priests and a large number of laymen signed a document declaring that the union with Rome was disbanded and asking to be received into the jurisdiction of the Moscow Patriarchate later the Orthodox Church of Czechoslovakia Greek Catholic faithfuls and clergy were presented with the choice of remaining in union with Rome and becoming Latin rite Catholics or keeping their Byzantine rite and become Orthodox The government transferred control of the Greek Catholic churches and other property to the Orthodox Church During the Prague Spring in 1968 the former Greek Catholic parishes were allowed to restore communion with Rome 19 As a result of anti Russian sentiment of the 292 parishes involved 205 voted in favor This was one of the few reforms by Dubcek that survived the Soviet invasion the same year However most of church buildings remained in the hands of Orthodox Church as they had originally been built as Orthodox churches and or the congregations of these churches had in large measure voted to have their parishes placed under the omophorion of the Orthodox Church in 1950 After communism was overthrown in the 1989 Velvet Revolution most of the Church property was returned to the Slovak Greek Catholic Church by 1993 The martyrdom of Bishop Gorazd was recognized by the Serbian Orthodox Church on May 4 1961 which canonized Gorazd as a New Martyr Subsequently on August 24 1987 he was canonized at the Cathedral of St Gorazd in Olomouc Moravia 20 Archbishop Rastislav of Presov was elected by the Extraordinary Synod held on January 11 2014 as the new primate 21 On December 9 2013 the Synod removed Archbishop Simeon Jakovlevic of Brno and Olomouc from his position as Locum Tenens ad interim administrator following the resignation of the previous primate Archbishop Krystof over allegations of sexual relations with women 22 and appointed Archbishop Rastislav in his place 23 an action against which Archbishop Simeon protested 24 and which was deplored by Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I of Constantinople who had supported Krystof 25 Administration editAfter Czechoslovakia separated into independent countries of the Czech Republic and Slovakia in 1993 church activity continued in each country as separate legal entities in the Czech Republic as the Orthodox Church in the Czech Lands and in the Slovak Republic as the Orthodox Church in Slovakia but canonical unity was maintained as the Orthodox Church of the Czech Lands and Slovakia The church is now organized into four eparchies divided into two administrative centers the Metropolitan Council for the Czech Republic resident in Prague and the Metropolitan Council for the Slovak Republic in Presov Under the Council of the Czech Lands Prague are the eparchies of Prague and Olomouc Brno while the eparchies of Presov and Michalovce are under the Council of Slovakia Presov After the death of Metropolitan Dorotheus of Prague and All Czechoslovakia Archbishop Nicholas of Presov was elected the new metropolitan and the church s primatial see was moved from Prague to Presov Metr Nicholas reposed clarification needed on January 30 2006 and was replaced by Archbishop Christopher of Prague and the Czech Lands elected May 2 2006 In the Czech Republic there are 82 parishes with 51 in Bohemia and 31 in Moravia and Silesia In Slovakia there are 90 parishes with 69 in the eparchy of Presov and 21 in the eparchy of Michalovce The Orthodox Theological Faculty of the University of Presov provides an education for future priests of combined Church The faculty maintains a branch in Olomouc 26 The Monastery of St Procopius of Sazava is located in Most and that of the Dormition in Vilemov The current primate of the Czechoslovak Orthodox Church is Rastislav of Presov cs born Ondrej Gont Metropolitan of the Czech Lands and Slovakia since 2014 Archdioceses and archbishops edit Archdiocese of Presov and Slovakia Metropolitan Rastislav Gont Metropolitan of the Czech Lands and Slovakia since 2014 Archdiocese of Prague and the Czech Lands Michal Dandar since 2015 Diocese of Brno and Olomouc Simeon Jakovlevic since 2000 Diocese of Michalovce and Kosice Juraj Stransky since 2007 Vicar dioceses and bishops edit Diocese of Beroun Jachym Hrdy since 2015 vicar bishop of Prague Diocese of Sumperk Izaias Slaninka since 2015 vicar bishop of Brno and OlomoucSee also editReligion in Slovakia Christianity in Slovakia Catholic Church in Slovakia Protestantism in SlovakiaReferences edit CNEWA Orthodox Church of the Czech Lands and Slovakia retrieved 2023 08 28 a b c d Wells Colin 2006 Sailing from Byzantium How a Lost Empire Shaped the World New York Bantam Dell ISBN 9780553382730 Richard P McBrien Lives of the Popes HarperCollins 2000 144 Dvornik Francis 1956 The Slavs Their Early History and Civilization Boston American Academy of Arts and Sciences p 179 The Psalter and the Book of Prophets were adapted or modernized with special regard to their use in Bulgarian churches and it was in this school that glagolitic writing was replaced by the so called Cyrillic writing which was more akin to the Greek uncial simplified matters considerably and is still used by the Orthodox Slavs Florin Curta 2006 Southeastern Europe in the Middle Ages 500 1250 Cambridge Medieval Textbooks Cambridge University Press pp 221 222 ISBN 978 0 521 81539 0 Cyrillic preslav J M Hussey Andrew Louth 2010 The Orthodox Church in the Byzantine Empire Oxford History of the Christian Church Oxford University Press p 100 ISBN 978 0 19 161488 0 The Changing World Religion Map Sacred Places Identities Practices and Politics 2015 p 430 The Czechoslovak Heresy and Schism The Emergence of a National Czechoslovak Church 1975 p 43 Martyr Gorazd of Prague Historie nasi pravoslavne cirkve Eastern Churches Journal A Journal of Eastern Christendom vol 4 1997 p 61 Bishop Damaskin Grdanicki Four fighting years 1943 p 69 News Flashes from Czechoslovakia Under Nazi Domination 1942 p 151 155 Christian Churches in Czechoslovakia History Mission Organization Statistics Addresses 1992 p 19 20 Memories of Lidice 2007 p 71 Eastern Christianity and politics in the twentieth century p 255 256 Metropolitan Herman concludes Official Visit to the Orthodox Church of the Czech Lands and Slovakia Orthodox Church in America October 11 2004 Retrieved August 25 2014 Orthodox Church of Czechoslovakia Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 25 September 2022 Eastern Christianity and the Cold War 1945 91 2010 p 137 138 143 New head of Orthodox Church of Czech Lands and Slovakia elected OrthoChristian Com Retrieved 2019 12 31 Prague Daily Monitor Czech Orthodox Church split over money archbishop Archived February 1 2014 at the Wayback Machine Communique of the Holy Synod of the Orthodox Church in the Czech Land and in Slovakia Archived February 2 2014 at the Wayback Machine Statement of Archbishop Simeon Archived January 3 2014 at the Wayback Machine Pravoslavna cirkev v ceskych zemich a na Slovensku Patriarcha Bartolomej je zdesen Arcibiskup Simeon byl odvolan nikoliv kanonickym postupem ale nepruhlednymi a neprijatelnymi zpusoby Synod funguje nezdrave a svevolne Usneseni Synodu jsou neplatna Arcibiskup Simeon zustava metropolitnim spravcem www pravoslavnacirkev info Archived from the original on February 11 2015 Retrieved 2019 12 31 Orthodox World website Orthodox Theological Faculty Of Presov Olomouc Czech RepublicExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Orthodox Church of the Czech Lands and Slovakia Official website in the Czech Republic Official website in Slovakia in Slovak Prague Eparchy of the Orthodox Church in the Czech Lands in Czech Electronic edition of the magazine Icon Pages about the orthodox Church in the Czech Republic in Czech Overview of the Church scroll down Article on the Orthodox Church in the Czech and Slovak Republics by Ronald Roberson on the CNEWA web site Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Orthodox Church of the Czech Lands and Slovakia amp oldid 1177737735, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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